പേജുകള്‍‌

Monday, October 06, 2014

Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, who won Best Actress in a Narrative Feature Film
at the Tribeca Film Festival as Carla and Valeria Golino as Roberta in
Paolo Virzì's Human Capital (Il Capitale Umano) give brilliant
performances entangled in a web of what is perhaps the most revolting
selection of male characters in a film I have seen at least this year.
Fabrizio Gifuni plays Giovanni and Fabrizio Bentivoglio is Dino. The
respective husbands are corrupt each in their own way. The former a
hedge fund finance power player, the latter a middle-class real estate
agent who would like to be like the other, corruption and all.

On an evening right before Christmas in Northern Italy, a waiter at a
school function is run over on his bicycle riding home in the snow. This
hit and run tragedy links a number of people from different social
backgrounds as Virzì's delicate and bewildering tale jumps back and
forth from a summer past to the fateful winter night.
Copy picture

Two families are tied together by an accident and their children. Serena
(Matilde Gioli) and Massimiliano (Guglielmo Pinelli) have very little
in common outside of school, and their relationship crumbles. Carla,
Massimiliano's mother, is a woman who has great financial privileges and
no emotional stability. Her life of manicures, massages and antiques
shopping makes her feel increasingly worthless. This is reinforced by
her husband, Giovanni, who communicates nothing of importance to her.

In an attempt to add some internal beauty for herself and the community -
a small fictional town near Milan - Carla buys a run-down theatre in
ruins she wants to renovate, and instead ends up falling into her
familiar trap of meaningless seduction. A trenchant scene depicts a
meeting of the newly formed theatre board and Virzì has great fun
savoring the characters' whopping fixations while they discuss a
possible repertoire. Anybody who has ever been to a board meeting will
recognise someone here.

Roberta, on the other hand, a psychologist working at the public clinic,
decides to be completely ignorant about the crumbling world of her
family, especially the dealings of husband Dino, who wants to move up in
the world.

Virzì, who told at the Tribeca Film Festival that Human Capital was
the first of the dozen films he made which did not classify as comedy,
keeps a light touch with his heavy subject matter. The different
perspectives are woven into a rich tapestry of the present world. Greed
and unconsidered, reckless desires are by no means an Italian
phenomenon.

Three perspectives, given one chapter each, illuminate disasters far
greater and perhaps much smaller than the accident at hand and tell us
about the nature of human capital. How much is a person worth? The
script is based on a novel by American author Stephen Amidon which is
set in Connecticut. The film takes place in a fictional town near Milan
and was shot in Como and surroundings.

Paolo Virzì's study of capitalism in crisis gives the audience all it
covets. Voyeurism is taken care of as we peek into the hearts and home
of the stylish wealthy. Their life is actually hellish, we discover to
our great relief. It is crumbling and causing the literal and
metaphorical quakes we all feel. A class lower, the annoying guy with
the garish orange watch and the "creative" facial hair and glasses is
indeed a dope who doesn't communicate with his pregnant wife. Virzi
confirms the worst.

Human Capital is a tale of people trapped in the wheels of money,
prestige and unfulfilled longings, disguised as a thriller. Some create
the wheels, some spin them and others run in them.